Your lease is up in 60 days and the renewal letter just landed with a number that’s $150 higher than what you’re paying now. Most people do one of two things: pay it, grumbling the whole time, or start apartment hunting out of spite and necessity. There’s a third option. Ask for a deal.
Do your homework before you say a word
Landlords aren’t raising your rent because they did math. They’re raising it because the “market rate went up” is a sentence that requires zero effort and creates maximum profit. Before you respond, pull up three comparable units in your complex or neighborhood — same size, similar floor, similar condition — and see what they’re actually asking now. If two-bedrooms in your building are listed at $1,650 and yours just got bumped to $1,850, you’re not negotiating anymore. You’re correcting a typo.
Lead with your record as a tenant and hard data, not your feelings
Nobody cares that a rent hike feels unfair. Property managers care about one thing: empty units cost them more than a small discount ever will. So make your case in their language, how it counts. Have you always paid on time for two years straight? Remind them of that. Never called maintenance for burnt out light bulbs. Remind them of that too. You’re not asking for a favor — you’re pointing out that you’re the tenant they don’t want to lose.
Lead with a number you can live with
“Can we talk about the rent increase?” gets you a form email with no woven with flowery corporation speak. “I’d like to renew at $1,650, based on comparable units in the building” gets you an actual answer. Be specific. Vague requests get vague, polite nos. Actual fact based requests get consideration and closer to a yes.
Know your walk-away, I need to move price
Decide before the conversation starts what number makes moving worth it. If they won’t budge past $1,725 and your ceiling is $1,700, you already know what you’re doing next — you don’t have to figure it out mid-negotiation while trying to sound calm.
Most renters never ask, so most renters just pay the increase. Landlords all know this. One email asking for a deal costs you nothing and takes ten minutes. Worst case, they say no and you’re exactly where you started. Best case, you just saved yourself an expensive and time consuming move for the price of one email.
